GARY GREEN
Stored safely at home, Gary Green still has his Dodger rookie team
baseball uniform from the summer of 1958, when he played for the
traveling squad after his freshman year at Orange Coast College.
“I wish I could still get into that uniform,” Green quipped.
A basketball and baseball star at Newport Harbor High and OCC,
Green grew up sort of like a minor leaguer, bouncing around from town
to town and station to station.
“I never went to the same school two years in a row, until my last
two years at Newport Harbor, from kindergarten on,” said Green (Class
of 1957), the son of a salesman “who changed jobs like we change our
sheets.”
A 6-foot, 185-pound right-handed pitcher, Green had the stuff that
earned him a baseball scholarship to USC, after meriting Eastern
Conference Player of the Year honors for Coach Wendell Pickens’
Pirates in ’59.
In ‘59, Green was given the team’s Most Valuable Player Award, the
first time the Orange Coast baseball program featured such a tribute.
Green was also named OCC’s Athlete of the Year in ’59.
Green was also Newport Harbor’s Athlete of the Year in 1957, when
he led Coach Jules Gage’s basketball team to the Sunset League
championship and a 19-6 mark. It was Newport Harbor’s second straight
Sunset title in hoops. On the diamond, Green posted a 9-3 record on
the mound and earned All-Sunset League honors for the second
consecutive season.
But it wasn’t always cushy for Green at Newport Harbor, the new
kid on the block at a beach school in an affluent area as a
sophomore, after coming from rather humble settings.
“It was tough to come in as the new kid,” said Green, born in
Ogden, Utah, and raised mostly in Nebraska, before his family moved
to California, where he attended Van Nuys Birmingham High his
freshman year.
“The smog was so bad in those days (in the San Fernando Valley),
they wouldn’t let us practice basketball, because you couldn’t
breathe. Your lungs would just be on fire,” Green said. “So going
from there to Newport Beach was like going to heaven.”
Meeting new friends in the middle of his sophomore year was a lot
tougher than making bounce passes on the hardwood or spinning
curveballs in the spring.
“The hardest thing to get used to was the fact that it’s such a
rich area,” Green said. “The kids drove better cars than my
(parents). The whole thing was totally new to me. I’d never been in
that kind of atmosphere. It was kind of hard to fit in, but it was
not too hard once sports started. That was a great introduction to
meeting people. It wasn’t that bad. We lived in Costa Mesa off Harbor
Boulevard in an old house with a dirt street.”
A two-time All-Sunset League basketball and baseball player, Green
was reportedly once named to Gage’s all-time Newport Harbor hoops
team (1953-62 era) -- along with Paul Neumann, Denny Fitzpatrick, Ed
Pope and Bob Wetzel.
Green said he “couldn’t jump,” but could shoot from outside and
play tenacious defense. “My hands were my biggest asset,” said Green,
who always guarded the opponent’s best, and sometimes tallest,
player.
When Green’s basketball career continued at OCC, he helped
first-year cage coach Alan Sawyer’s Pirates win the Eastern
Conference championship in 1957-58, finishing with a 20-8 record, and
was the team captain the following season when they ended 24-7. He
was an all-conference selection both campaigns.
In baseball at Orange Coast, Green was a highly sought-after
pitcher, but also played third base and batted .411 his sophomore year in ’59.
At USC, Green’s baseball career came to an end, after he “screwed
up” and “didn’t stick it out.”
Green, the latest honoree in the Daily Pilot Sports Hall of Fame,
lives in the Bay area with his wife, Vicky, and two stepchildren.
Green has worked in the janitorial business for over 30 years.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.